1、江苏省南京市届高三零模考前复习卷英语试题江苏省南京市2022届高三零模考前复习卷英语试题学校_ 班级_ 姓名_ 学号_ 一、阅读选择1. Living Divani FurnitureExtrasoft Living Divani: no limits to your fantasy 5,735Extrasoft Living Divani is a sofa that lives up to the promise in its name: to be a really comfortable sofa. Enjoy creating your dream sofa, matching th
2、e different bases, armrests, and backrests and choose your favourite fabrics and leathers: fantasy is your limit. Furnish your living room with made in Italy furniture, now available for you at a special price.Frog Interweave Armchair 6,048Frog by Living Divani is an armchair with an essential and m
3、odern design. It has a steel frame and woven with the following materials: cut in natural and colored natural leather, hemp cord, profile in PVC. Available in different colors.Living Divani Neowall: modular sofa perfection 3,672Neowall by Living Divani is an incredible sofa, and not because of its p
4、rice. Its uniqueness lies in the exclusive design, the high-quality materials and the maximum comfort it guarantees. Sober, modern and characterized by clean lines, the masterpiece of designer Piero Lissoni is able to adapt to the most varied needs, thanks to adaptable elements, fabrics, and colours
5、. Neowall is the canap(长沙发) that fully reflects the taste in furnishing those who choose it, telling its story.Flow Rocking Chair 2,715Flow by Living Divani is a light and versatile rocking chair, perfect for unique relax moments. The minimal design, with essential shapes, makes it perfect in every
6、living area. A fashionable alternative to a classic armchair.Buy online at Mobilificio Marchese: we guarantee you our best price.【小题1】What is worth a try if you buy Extrasoft Living Divani?AGetting a masterpiece by Piero Lissoni.BRocking the chair to relax yourself.CCustomizing a sofa to your taste.
7、DCutting naturally colored leather.【小题2】What makes Living Divani Neowall special?AIts reasonable price.BSignature of the designer.CThe touching story behind.DTop-grade materials.【小题3】Where might you read this article?AOn a trading platform.BIn a newspaper.CIn a financial report.DOn a government webs
8、ite.2. In order to help discover spoilage and reduce food waste for supermarkets and consumers, researchers have developed new low-cost, smart phone-linked, eco-friendly spoilage sensors for meat and fish packaging.One in three UK consumers throw away food just because it reaches the use-by date, bu
9、t 60% of the 12.5 billion-worth of food we throw away each year is safe to eat.The researchers, whose findings were published in ACS Sensors, say the sensors could also eventually replace the use-by datea widely used indicator of being fresh and eatable.The sensors cost two US cents each to make. Kn
10、own as “paper-based electrical gas sensors (PEGS)”, they detect spoilage gases like ammonia (a poisonous gas with a strong unpleasant smell) in meat and fish products. The information provided by the electronic nose is received by a smart phone, and then you can know whether the food is fresh and sa
11、fe to eat.The Imperial College London researchers who developed PEGS made the sensors by printing carbon electrodes onto a special type of paper. The materials are eco-friendly and harmless, so they dont damage the environment and are safe to use in food packaging. The sensors, combined with a tiny
12、electronic system, then inform nearby mobile devices, which identify and understand the data about spoilage gases.Lead author Dr Firat Guder of Imperials Department of Bioengineering, said, “Although theyre designed to keep us safe, use-by dates can lead to eatable food being thrown away. They dont
13、always reflect its actual freshness. In fact, people often get sick from food-borne diseases due to poor storage, even when an item is within its use-by date.”“These sensors are cheap enough so we hope to see supermarkets using them within three years. Our goal is to use PEGS in food packaging to re
14、duce unnecessary food waste.”The authors hope that PEGS could have applications beyond food processing, like sensing chemicals in agriculture, air quality, and detecting disease markers in breath like those involved in kidney disease.【小题1】What is the function of PEGS according to the text?ATo improv
15、e the taste of foods.BTo improve the service of stores.CTo help supermarkets store foods.DTo help people test food freshness.【小题2】What role does the smartphone play while PEGS are functioning?AIt acts as an electronic nose.BIt reads the data collected by PEGS.CIt helps print the gas sensors onto pap
16、er.DIt discovers the spoilage gases from foods.【小题3】What does Dr. Firat Guder say about use-by dates?AThey are not completely reliable.BThey can help reduce food waste.CThey are based on scientific research.DThey are not accepted by the consumers.【小题4】What does the author mainly talk about in the te
17、xt?AThe process of researching spoilage sensors.BA new technology in packaging to reduce food waste.CThe application of spoilage sensors beyond food processing.DThe influence of use-by dates on supermarkets and consumers.3. If your in-box is currently reporting unread messages in the hundreds or tho
18、usands, you might have a hard time believing the news: e-mail is on the decline.At first thought, that might seem to be the case. The incoming generation, after all, doesnt do e-mail. Oh, they might have an account. They use it only as we would use a fax machine: as a means to communicate with old-s
19、chool folks like their parents or to fulfill the sign-up requirements of Web sites. They rarely check it, though.Todays instant electronic memos such as texting and Facebook and Twitter messages are more direct, more concentrated, more efficient. They go without the salutation (称呼语) and the signoff
20、(签收); we already know the “to” and “from.” Many corporations are moving to messaging networks for exactly that reason: more signal, less noise and less time. This trend is further evidence that store-and-forward systems such as e-mail and voicemail are outdated. Instead of my leaving you a lengthy m
21、essage that you pick up later, I can now send you an easily-read message that you can read and respond to on the go.The coming of the mobile era is responsible for the decline of e-mail. Instant written messages bring great convince to people. They can deal with them at about any time: before a movi
22、e, in a taxi, waiting for lunch. And because these messages are very brief, theyre suitable for smart phonetyping.Does this mean e-mail is on its way to the dustbin of digital history? Not necessarily. E-mail still has certain advantages. On the other hand, tweets and texts feel ephemeral you read t
23、hem, then theyre gone, into an endless string, e-mail still feels like something you have and that you can file, search and return to later. Its easy to imagine that it will continue to feel more appropriate for formal communications: agreements, important news, longer explanations.So, e-mail wont g
24、o away completely. Remember, weve been through a transition (过度) like this not so long ago: when e-mail was on the rise, people said that postal mail was dead. Thats not how it works. Postal mail found its smaller market, and so will e-mail. New technology rarely replaces old one completely; it just
25、 adds new alternatives.【小题1】What would the incoming generation like to do with their e-mail accounts?ACheck bank accounts.BSend long messages.CFill in some forms.DCommunicate with their colleagues.【小题2】Which of the following is mainly discussed in paragraphs 3 and 4?AThe possible reasons behind the
26、decline of e-mailBThe likes and dislikes of the young generationCThe rapid development of e-communication channelsDEvidence about the uncertain future of easily-consumed messages【小题3】What does the underlined word “ephemeral” in paragraph 5 mean?AAutomatically-sending.BRandomly-written.CHardly- recog
27、nized.DShortly-appearing.【小题4】According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?AIts too early to determine the decline of e-mail.BE-mail has reasons to exist with its own advantages.CE-mail, just like postal mail has come to its end.DWe should feel sorry for the decline of e-mail.
28、4. Even though some people believe that money makes the world go around, many people would choose health over wealth. For someone like violinist Robert Gupta, who was on his way to becoming a physician before joining the Los Angeles Philharmonic at age 19, music, health, and wealth are all part of t
29、he same package.In addition to music, Gupta is deeply interested in neurobiology Because of his interests, he has had the chance to work with Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, a talented musician whose career was sidelined by schizophrenia. Although Ayers studied music at the Juilliard School York City, his
30、mental illness got in the way of professional success.After dropping out of Julliard and having unsuccessful medical treatment for his schizophrenia, Ayers moved to Los Angeles where he ended up homeless. In 2005, a journalist for the Los Angeles Times named Steve Lopez heard Ayers playing music in
31、the streets. Lopez wrote a book about Ayers and became his friend. Their friendship became the subject of a movie, and because of the book and the movie, Ayers has had a chance to perform his music in some of the most famous concert halls in the world.It seemed like Ayers had found his happy ending.
32、 However, he refuses to take medication to treat his schizophrenia. He says it keeps him from “hearing the music”. Because of this, Ayers is still subject to schizophrenia and sometimes leaves his home to go back to the streets.Gupta was introduced to Ayers after Lopez took his friend to a performance of Beethovens First and Fourth symphonies, and Ayers asked Gupt
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